This book is hilarious, easy to read, and emotional at times. This is a book that seems to be written in a way that would appeal to younger readers, it is written rather informally, which makes it easy to read and at times hilarious. What makes me say "hilarious" is simply the title of Chapter Two: Hot Young Biden (1960-1972). The chapter features tweets from Twitter from random people reacting to a photo of Biden from his college days--some went into some detail about how attractive they found him to be, emojis and all. I wouldn’t have included them If I were writing a political bio, but I did find it entertaining to read.

On college:
The chapter did include some interesting insight into what his personality was like in his college days. He was a ladies' man, loved football, slacked off, but did not like to party. Also, the fact that he was considering priesthood pre-college surprised me:

As he mulled over where to go to college, Joe thought about becoming a priest. Even though he had “dated a lot of girls” by that point, he still felt his calling of the frock.
So, he went to the University of Delaware, dated more girls, and basically turned himself into Hot Young Biden.
[He] confessed: “I probably started my first year of college a little too interested in football and meeting new girls. There were a lot of new girls to meet.” He drove to Fort Lauderdale with some buddies for Spring Break. Yet he was bummed to find a mob of silly drunken college kids, all of them acting stupid.
--(pp. 18-9)

On vices:
Joe Biden rejects alcohol, drugs, and smoking—admirable, to say the least, given that the rest of his college career centered around sports and girls, which typically would also imply alcohol, drugs, and smoking. His rejection to anything that could be used as a “crutch” shows the disciplined nature of his personality. He claims to have never tried any vice in his life:

Joe Biden has never had a beer. He has never had a drop of alcohol, not even on Spring Break. As a kid, he had noticed that his uncle drank too much, and he wanted to avoid the same fate. Biden had the same policy with cigarettes and pot: “I don’t use anything that could be a crutch,” he told a reporter in 1970. “I use football as a crutch and motorcycle jumping and skiing – I ski like a madman. But those are crutches over which I have some control. I’m against chemical crutches.”
--(p. 22)

That reminds me of my great grandmother who had also claimed she had never touched any vice. She avoided alcohol/cigarettes/drugs for the same reason as Joe: she had seen what damage alcoholism and cigarette smoking had done to her family, and decided she wanted no part in such unhealthy behaviors. That takes guts; that is an example of truth to one’s own beliefs and philosophy. These are not things anyone needs in life, and for Biden to not even have the curiosity to try even one beer, really shows the internal strength he has and the unwavering dedication for sticking to what he sees as right.

On campaign ads:
The book does justice explaining how Joe ran his first campaign for Senate in 1972. It explains how, in a way, Joe set a precedent for future political advertising; his techniques were replicated by other politicians in races to come:

Biden had an idea for a radio ad that was, well, a tad unconventional. In the ad, Biden approached random people at a grocery store …Joe’s bizarre ad was joined by a series of brochures; the literature was slick. “Joe Biden is making an impact on the U.S. Senate and he hasn’t even been elected yet,” said the front page of one brochure, and then inside, it showed photos of Biden next to veteran senators. “The printed material became kind of a revolution for political print, and was duplicated afterwards,” says one pundit. (In 2015, lifelong pundit Chris Matthews remembered these brochures as something that he had “never seen-before or since. He looked like he belonged there [in the Senate]; in fact, like he was already there.”)
--(pp. 40-1)

Biden’s advertising techniques are crazy enough to be good. I like that he advertised in his own way. He knows how to self-advertise as well as how to stay relevant. His advertising displayed his confidence front and center.

On campaign finance:
Biden didn’t take what he considered a bribe in his first run for senate, even though he needed the campaign donation, because the donation, he felt, came with strings attached. He stuck to his beliefs and said he wouldn’t even consider lowering the capital gains tax if he were elected, even though if he had agreed to even just “consider’ it he would have been given money for his campaign which he so desperately needed.

As Team Biden neared the finish line, they were running out of money. And they needed to keep their radio ads on the air….
[a meeting with some fat-cat investment counselors.] They were ready to give.

In a private meeting, they asked Biden what he thought about lowering the capital gains rate. He told them he wasn’t for changing capital gains.

[Instead], he took out a second mortgage on his home. The ads stayed up. [Biden] won by just 3,162 votes.
--(pp. 42-3)

Instead of folding under pressure, and accepting what felt like a quid-pro-quo, he doubled down on his beliefs and took out a second mortgage to finance his campaign. This shows Biden’s dedication to justice. This is the type of dedication to one’s own morals and ethics that we need to see in the white house. I think that this speaks volumes of his character and ability to lead

On personal tragedy: Upon starting his work on Capitol Hill, right after the 1972 election and before he was sworn in as Senator, Biden was faced with the loss of his wife and daughter. The book references a transcribed phone call he received from Nixon after losing his loved ones.

Nixon: “Senator, I know this is a very tragic day for you, but I wanted you to know that all of us here at the White House were thinking about you and praying for you, and also for your two children.”
Biden: “I appreciate that very much.”
Nixon: “I understand you were on the Hill at the time, and your wife was just driving by herself.”
Biden: “Yes, that’s right.”
Nixon: “But in any event, looking at it you must in terms of the future, because you have the great fortune of being young. I remember I was two years older than you when I went into the House. [Laughs] But the main point is you can remember that she was there when you won a great victory. You enjoyed it together, and now, I’m sure, she’ll be watching you from now on. Good luck to you.”
Biden: “Thank you very much, Mr. President.”
Nixon: “Okay.”
Biden: “Thank you for your call, I appreciate it.”

On empathy:
Accompanying this transcribed call is an excerpt from a speech he gave to families of soldiers that died in the line of duty. The book highlights that empathy is one of Biden’s “fundamental qualities”, based on how he coped with the loss of his loved ones. This is another example of Biden’s strength as a leader. Facing the most tragic of odds, he was able to endure and stay focused on being there for his two sons, and what he needed to do in Washington.

[Speaking to the families of soldiers who had died in the line of duty in Vietnam, Biden said]: “There will come a day, I promise you, when the thought of your son or daughter or your husband or wife brings a smile to your lips before it brings a tear to your eye.” He paused, looked at the crowd, and it was clear that he fully understood their grief. “It will happen. My prayer for you is that the day will come sooner or later. But the only thing I have more experience than you is this: I’m telling you it will come.”

The tragedy of the accident, in a sense, helps us understand one of Biden’s most fundamental qualities: empathy. He connects with people. And as he told the class of 2017 at Colby College, forming personal connections – through empathy – is the one successful trait that he sees in all the best world leaders.

Caring about your colleague as they’re dealing with a sick parent, or their child [who] graduated from college, or the child was in an accident. That’s the stuff that fosters real relationships, breeds trust, allows you to get things done in a complex world. The person on the other side of the negotiating table, the other side of the political debate; a person who doesn’t look like you, who lives in a community you’ve never visited, a person who has a different background or religion than yours. They’re not some flattened version of humanity, reducible to a collection of parts and attributes. They’re a whole person, flawed, struggling to make it in the world just like you.
--(pp. 47-9)

Bottom line:The pundits say that Biden's biggest challenge in the 2020 race will be connecting with young voters, because of the intense competition for that demographic from Beto O'Rourke and Bernie Sanders. But I'm a young voter, and I felt a lot of "connection" in this book – perhaps the pundits should talk with more young voters before they count Biden out.

War & PeaceJoe Biden: Vietnam war was horrendous waste based on a flawed premise.
Joe Biden: 1993: Arm the victims: end the Bosnian embargo.
Joe Biden: Son Beau served in Iraq while Delaware Attorney General.

The above quotations are from The Book of JoeThe Life, Wit, and (Sometimes Accidental) Wisdom of Joe Bidenby Jeff Wilser.

Second BOOK REVIEW by OnTheIssues.org:

The "Book of Joe" is an unauthorized biography of Joe Biden, written without Biden's input, by a well-known journalist (Jeff Wilser places his name on the cover in the same font and size as "Joe Biden," which makes it look like an authorized biography, but that is just layout trick – if you look closely, there's an "of" before the "Joe Biden.") The book reviews several relatively unknown aspects of Biden's childhood and early career, as well as his later and better-known accomplishments (published in 2017, hence after Obama/Biden left office and before the presidential 2020 race started).

We'll explore here the title, which is nearly identical to "The Book of Job." You'll recall that's a section in the Bible, and it's pronounced "Joe-ub" with a long "O" like in "Joe." I actually read the whole book without noticing that, until I uttered the title to another OnTheIssues editor – then I wondered if the author realized the association, and I'll explore here why the association is obvious.

The biblical "Book of Job" is about a man named Job, a wealthy man with a large family who has his faith "tested" by God. Over time, Job loses his family, loses his wealth, loses his health – the test is whether Job can maintain his faith and spirit, even though he was the recipient of so many undeserved negative events. Job mourns and is dispirited, but maintains his confidence that he will eventually be redeemed.

Now compare that parable to Joe Biden's life – which has been filled with major "tests" just like those that tested Job. We count five major tests:

1950s: Biden's childhood was marred by heavy stuttering, with concomitant school bullying. He overcame that speech impediment before he got to college (pp. 3-7).

1966: Biden was caught "plagiarizing" in a law school class, due to "poor citation methods" rather than anything intentional, he says apologetically (pp. 26-7).
This incident has plagued him ever since, in many elections, especially in the 1988 presidential primary, where Biden was accused of plagiarizing parts of a speech (pp. 74-7).

1972: Upon getting elected to the U.S. Senate for the first time in 1972, Biden's wife and child were killed in an automobile accident (Biden was not in the car); Biden almost resigned from the Senate before getting sworn in (pp. 45-51).

1988: Biden suffered a brain aneurysm while on the preidential campaign trail in 1988. He credits withdrawing from the rac (partly due to the plagiarism incident above) with saving his life, since he got medical attention and emergency brain surgery instead of pushing forward on the campaign trail (pp. 89-92).

2015: Biden's son Beau was elected as Attorney General of Delaware in 2006, and was planning to run for Governor in 2015 when he was stricken with brain cancer and died. This event is generally considered the primary reason that Biden did not run for president in 2016 (pp 158-66).

Any one of those events could be considered a life-defining event, and indeed they have defined Biden's life, as noted in many of the excerpts from this book. Having four such events in one person's lifetime can only be described one way: "tested like in the book of Job."

Martin Luther King famously said, "unearned suffering is redemptive" (and MLK, familiar with the Book of Job, used language consistent with that book). Joe Biden has been "redeemed" by plenty of unearned suffering (ok, maybe his plagiarism suffering wasn't quite unearned, but we accept his explanation that he was a young and sloppy student, and it was just his bad luck that he was the one caught and punished).

The result of Biden's redemption is that he knows he can handle anything. In that context, he was a good pick as Vice President for "No-Drama Obama." In 2020, that translates to "able to handle Trump's taunts and Republican bashing." Biden has handled taunts all of his life and hence will be unperturbed by Trump. The first Republican bashing came this month with newly-publicized records of Biden opposing school busing in the 1970s – that's a serious matter but Biden took it on with equanimity. Expect to see more example of unperturbed equanimity as the 2020 race proceeds.